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We gay folk, who inhabit bodies of the type we naturally desire,
require a sex-positive spiritual practice that celebrates and
utilizes our gay being instead of opposing it. We need a spiritual
practice that teaches us how to use our senses instead of merely
shutting them off or repressing them. We need a practice that
empowers us to integrate all the rejected aspects of self to form a
strong, healthy gay identity, which confers a spiritual advantage
in deep spiritual practice. We need a spiritual practice that
recognizes that gender and gender identity are fluid, that we all
contain elements of the masculine and feminine. We need a spiritual
practice that recognizes not only that same-sex love is possible,
but that our love can powerfully energize a deep quest for
Self-awareness and enlightenment. We need to realize that any
feeling of shame or unworthiness connected to our gay being
shackles our spirit and blocks us from the full realization of
God/dess within, for the Divine Being is gay, too.
Though often associated with sexual practices, traditional Hindu
Tantra presents a body of sophisticated psycho-physical techniques
for attaining enlightenment. The tradition is often perplexing to
the uninitiated due to Tantra's use of metaphors that serve to keep
the teachings secret from outsiders. The author reveals the secrets
and hidden meanings of important Tantric symbols and distills 50
years of practice and teaching into a form accessible to readers
new to the tradition. Drawing on his own experience, the author
presents a demystified and simplified version of Tantric practices
that any sincere spiritual aspirant East or West can actually do.
Integrating sexuality with spirituality has been the specialty of
traditional Hindu Tantra for at least 1500 years. The short
readings in this book adapt the concepts and methods of the ancient
tantric tradition for LGBT persons of all genders living in our
modern, rapidly changing world. Gay and gender-non-conforming
persons have been condemned or ignored by all major religions, and
many LGBT persons may reject religion in general, sometimes
substituting sex, drugs, or other diversions. Substitutes for true
spirituality ultimately fail to remedy the existential conditions
of mortality, isolation, and meaningless- ness as only a deep
spiritual practice can. These readings demonstrate various ways
LGBT people can tap into the deepest currents of human spirituality
while recognizing the special spiritual needs and aptitudes that
come with an LGBT identity. Gay Tantra teaches us to attain the
heights of spiritual enlightenment utilizing fully our LGBT
experiences and ways of being in the world.
We gay folk, who inhabit bodies of the type we naturally desire,
require a sex-positive spiritual practice that celebrates and
utilizes our gay being instead of opposing it. We need a spiritual
practice that teaches us how to use our senses instead of merely
shutting them off or repressing them. We need a practice that
empowers us to integrate all the rejected aspects of self to form a
strong, healthy gay identity, which confers a spiritual advantage
in deep spiritual practice. We need a spiritual practice that
recognizes that gender and gender identity are fluid, that we all
contain elements of the masculine and feminine. We need a spiritual
practice that recognizes not only that same-sex love is possible,
but that our love can powerfully energize a deep quest for
Self-awareness and enlightenment. We need to realize that any
feeling of shame or unworthiness connected to our gay being
shackles our spirit and blocks us from the full realization of
God/dess within, for the Divine Being is gay, too.
In this volume that follows Gay Tantra (Xlibris 2000) and Essays on
Gay Tantra (Xlibris 2000), William Schindler, a.k.a. Brother
William, invites the reader into deeper and previously mostly
secret aspects of Tantric philosophy and practice. Traditional
Tantra teaches methods of spiritual enlightenment-not sexual
practices. In traditional Tantra sexuality and other types of
sensuality are integrated into a whole-life approach to
spirituality. But merely calling a practice or technique "Tantra"
does not make it so. Traditional Tantra can only be learned from
one who has studied and practiced in a line of enlightened Gurus.
Brother William has been studying and practicing traditional Hindu
Tantra since 1969 both in India and America, and since 1997, when
he founded Ashram West, he has been teaching his adaptation of
traditional Tantra for gay-identified persons, making intelligible
the esoteric teachings of the ancient tradition.
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